Battle Of Library’s Internet Porn Policy Heats Up

ORLAND PARK, Ill. (STMW) — Is south suburban mom Megan Fox on a campaign to make the Orland Park Public Library safer for patrons, as she insists? Or is she on an all-out drive to malign the facility, as library officials contend?

The monthlong battle between the southwest suburban library staff and Fox over adults’ access to pornography on library computers took another tense turn on Monday. Fox, a mother of two who homeschools her children, said that when she tried early Monday to hand out fliers claiming the two-story facility is “a dangerous place for children,” she was told to leave.

Then Orland Park police were called.

Bridget Bittman, library spokeswoman, said no arrests were made. But Fox, who said she lives in Mokena but frequents several local libraries, and her friend, Kevin DuJan — who according to his blog, Hillbuzz.org, lives in Chicago — were reminded that, “We have a policy that states no leaflets may be distributed on library grounds,” Bittman said

Monday’s fight came indoors when Fox and DuJan, both writers, attended a special budget meeting of the library board to once again state their complaints that the library allows easy access to pornography and that people caught looking at obscene or illegal materials are not dealt with properly.At the beginning of the meeting, library secretary Nancy Healy read a statement reiterating the library’s policy regarding access.

“That said,“ Bittman added, “Accessing obscene or illegal material will not be tolerated and the police will be notified.”

The library does not stock magazines considered to be obscene.

Bittman said filters would not only limit a patron’s rights, they could ban access to sites college students or people doing research might need to access. Being denied access to the word “breast” might prevent a person from looking up breast cancer, for example, she said.

The battle began Oct. 4 after Fox tried to access a computer in the children’s section of the library. Adults who are not accompanied by children are not allowed to use the children’s computers.

Fox says she had her two children with her. Bittman, however, said records contradict Fox’s account and show she did not have any youngsters with her that day.

“She was told to use the computers in the adult section upstairs,” Bittman said.

Fox said she when she went upstairs, she immediately saw three men looking at pornography on computer screens. She said she complained to a library staffer but that her objections were dismissed.

Bittman said the library staffer told library officials that Fox’s original story was that one man was accessing pornography. “Her story changes over time,” Bittman said. Either because she was incensed by what she saw, as Fox says, or because she felt rebuffed by library staffers, as Bittman says, Fox launched into a YouTube and Facebook campaign to get the library to change its policies.

Fox also reviews young adult literature, with a specific eye toward obscenity.

“I read the books so other parents won’t have to,” she said.

DuJan is founder of a conservative political website, Hillbuzz.org, on which Fox is an active contributor with articles such as, “Are Public Schools Modern Altars for Child Sacrifice?” and “3 Ways to Know if You’re a Crappy Parent Courtesy of Dina Lohan.”

According to Barbara Jones, American Library Association (ALA) Director of Intellectual Freedom, “Librarians have a special role in our democracy to safeguard everyone’s access to information protected by the First Amendment.”

The ALA opposes any obstacle to library users’ access to constitutionally protected content, Jones said in a release, not only because such practices can violate the First Amendment, but because they hinder the library’s mission to provide free and open access to information.

Jones continued, “The Internet empowers users to choose for themselves the information they wish to view. Unlike collecting and purchasing books or magazines, the library provides access to the Internet as a whole. However, not every website is appropriate for young children.”

She added that the ALA takes the protection of children very seriously. Librarians work closely with parents to ensure that children view and borrow only age-appropriate material, she said.

Fox said filters on computers are not a violation of a person’s rights.